Facets of Focalisation in James Joyce’s A Painful Case: A Narrative Analysis

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.52131/pjhss.2022.1004.0324

Keywords:

Focalisation, Genette’s typology, facets of focalisation, A Painful Case, James Joyce, Uspensky

Abstract

The present paper deals with modern narrative theory concentrating on focalisation and its facets in the short story A Painful Case by James Joyce. The cognitively minded narratological notion of focalisation, a term coined by Genette (1983), developed by Uspenski? (1973) and broadened and refined by Rimmon-Kenan (2003), discusses the perceptual, psychological, and ideological positions adopted by the narrator(s) or character(s) in the tale (s). In recent years, there has been considerable interest in focalisation and its implications for narrativity and fictionality. The present paper is an endeavour to analyse the short story A Painful Case by James Joyce through perceptual, psychological, and ideological facets of focalisation. The reader can better understand the text and deduce how the characters at the two levels of discourse and story view the fictitious world and how they are connected via this study. In conclusion, the study of focalization enables us to perceive the story as a network with several layers and consolidates our appreciation of Joyce’s narrative environment design.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Author Biographies

Adnan Rashid Sheikh, Umm Al Qura University, Makkah Mukarrama, Saudi Arabia.

English Language Center

Muhammad Ashfaq Munaf, Umm Al Qura University, Makkah Mukarrama, Saudi Arabia.

Language Instructor, English Language Center

Ameer Sultan, International Islamic University Islamabad, Pakistan.

Lecturer, Department of English (FLL)

Downloads

Published

2022-12-31

How to Cite

Sheikh, A. R. ., Munaf, M. A. ., & Sultan, A. (2022). Facets of Focalisation in James Joyce’s A Painful Case: A Narrative Analysis . Pakistan Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences, 10(4), 1668–1678. https://doi.org/10.52131/pjhss.2022.1004.0324

Issue

Section

Articles